The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wells Fargo plans jobs cut of 5-10 percent

- By Hannah Levitt

Wells Fargo & Co. plans to trim its workforce by about 5 percent to 10 percent within three years as Chief Executive Officer Tim Sloan works to pull the bank clear of customer-abuse scandals and prop up a lagging stock price.

Sloan, who made the announceme­nt to employees at a town-hall meeting Thursday, has reduced headcount as he cleans up the bank and streamline­s operations. The San Francisco-based lender is struggling to grow under the weight of a Federal Reserve assets cap. It had 265,000 employees as of June 30, according to a regulatory filing.

“It says something about the revenue environmen­t for them,” Charles Peabody, an analyst at Portales Partners, said in an interview. “If they’re not in the midst of recognizin­g that revenues are in trouble, they’re anticipati­ng it.”

Wells Fargo says it is reducing expenses amid regulatory fines and higher legal costs stemming from the string of customer abuses that erupted in 2016. The bank has pledged $4 billion in reductions by the end of next year.

The cuts announced Thursday are part of the previously provided year-end expense targets for 2018, 2019 and 2020, according to company spokesman Peter Gilchrist. Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberr­y said at a conference earlier this month that Wells Fargo is on track to achieve the 2018 target.

Sloan, who took the helm almost two years ago during a scandal over falsified accounts, has shuffled executives and reworked internal controls while traveling the country to espouse a commitment to customer service.

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